Let $\textbf A$ denote the space of symmetric $(n\times n)$ matrices over the field $\mathbb K$, and $\textbf B$ the space of skew-symmetric $(n\times n)$ matrices over the field $\mathbb K$. Then $\dim (\textbf A)=n(n+1)/2$ and $\dim (\textbf B)=n(n-1)/2$.
Short question: is there any short explanation (maybe with combinatorics) why this statement is true?
EDIT: $\dim$ refers to linear spaces.
